Word for Wednesday: Mumuration

A recent article on the BBC News website reminded us of a natural display that should not be missed.

The article refers to a 'mumuration' of some 70,000 starlings above a Oxfordshire nature reserve was described as a "ballet of the skies".
Dr Anne Goodenough, from the University of Gloucestershire, said the spectacle was "an absolutely fantastic phenomenon".
"I would defy anyone to watch this and not have a smile on their face. It's the sound of them beating their wings as one, moving together as one, and that's where the word 'murmuration' comes from - a murmour," she said.

The university is carrying out a survey to help establish the reason for the extraordinary aerial behaviour.

"Spellzone fits in beautifully with our Scope and Sequence of Phonological Awareness and Spelling. It also aligns perfectly with the four areas of spelling knowledge and uses the Brain, Ears, Eyes approach to learning spelling."
Thank you!Teacher, Australia